Performance Tuning On the Fly at CMP.LY Using MongoDB Management Service
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Transcript of Performance Tuning On the Fly at CMP.LY Using MongoDB Management Service
1JUNE 2014
Performance Tuning on the Fly at CMP.LY
Michael De LorenzoCTO, CMP.LY [email protected] @mikedelorenzo
2JUNE 2014
Agenda• CMP.LY and CommandPost• What is MongoDB Management Service?• Performance Tuning• MongoDB Issues we’ve faced
• Slow response times and delayed writes• Unindexed queries• Rising Replication Lag + Falling oplog Window
• Keep your deployment healthy with MMS• Using MMS Alerts• Using MMS Backups
3JUNE 2014
A venture-funded NYC startup that offers proprietary social media, monitoring, measurement, insight and compliance solutions for Fortune 100
A Monitoring, Measurement & Insights (MMI) tool for managed social communications.
4JUNE 2014
Use CommandPost to:• Track and measure cross-platform in real-time• Identify and attribute high-value engagement• Analyze and segment engaged audience• Optimize content and engagement strategies• Address compliance needs
5JUNE 2014
What is MongoDB Management Service?
6JUNE 2014
MongoDB Management Service• Free MongoDB Monitoring• MongoDB Backup in the Cloud• Free Cloud service or Available
to run On-Prem for Standard or Enterprise Subscriptions
• Automation coming soon—FTW! Ops
Makes MongoDB easier to use and manage
7JUNE 2014
Who Is MMS for?• Developers
• Ops Team
• MongoDB Technical Service Team
8JUNE 2014
Performance Tuning
9JUNE 2014
How To Do Performance Tuning?• Assess the problem and establish acceptable behavior.• Measure the performance before modification.• Identify the bottleneck.• Remove the bottleneck.• Measure performance after modification to confirm.• Keep it or revert it and repeat.
Adapted from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Performance_tuning]
10JUNE 2014
What We’ve Faced
11JUNE 2014
Issues We’ve Faced• Concurrency Issues
• Slow response times and delayed writes
• Querying without indexes• Slow reads, timeouts
• Increasing Replication Lag + Plummeting oplog Window
12JUNE 2014
ConcurrencySlow responses and delayed writes
13JUNE 2014
Concurrency• What is it?
• How did it affect us?
• How did MMS help identify it?
• How did we diagnose the issue in our app and fix it?
• Today
14JUNE 2014
Concurrency in MongoDB• MongoDB uses a readers-writer lock
• Many read operations can use a read lock
• If a write lock exists, a single write lock holds the lock exclusively• No other read or write operations can share the lock
• Locks are “writer-greedy”
15JUNE 2014
How Did This Affect Us?• Slow API response times due to slow database operations
• Delayed writes
• Backed up queues
16JUNE 2014
MMS: Identify Concurrency Issues
17JUNE 2014
Lock % Greater than 100%?!?!?• Global lock percentage is a derived metric:
% of time in global lock (small number)
+% of time locked by hottest (“most locked”) database
• Data is sampled and combined, it is possible to see values over 100%.
18JUNE 2014
Diagnosis• Identified the write-heavy collections in our applications
• Used application logs to identify slow API responses
• Analyzed MongoDB logs to identify slow database queries
19JUNE 2014
Our Remedies• Schema changes
• Message queues
• Multiple databases
• Sharding
20JUNE 2014
Schema Changes• Changed our schema
• Allowed for atomic updates
• Customized documents’ _id attribute• Leveraged existing index on _id attribute
21JUNE 2014
Normalized Schema// Social Content Collection{
_id: “12345”,_type: “tweet”,text: “Welcome to #MongoDBWorld!”twitter_user: “mongodb”
}// Campaign Collection{
_id: “mongodbworld_campaign”, name: “MongoDB World”}// Campaign Content Collection (joins content + campaigns){
campaign_id: “#mongodbworld_campaign”, content_id: “12345” }
22JUNE 2014
Denormalized Schema// Social Content Collection{
"_id": “tweet_123456789”,“text”: 'Welcome to #MongoDBWorld!'“twitter_user”: 'mongodb',“campaigns”: [“mongodbworld_campaign”]
}
23JUNE 2014
Modeling for Atomic Operations
Document{ "_id": “tweet_123456789”, "text": "Welcome to #MongoDBWorld!", "twitter_user": "mongodb", “campaigns": [ ]}
Update Operationdb.social_content.update(
{_id: “tweet_123456789”
},{
$addToSet: { campaigns: ”mongodbworld_campaign” }}
);
ResultWriteResult({
"nMatched": 1,"nUpserted”:0,"nModified": 1})
24JUNE 2014
Message Queues• Controlled writes to specific collections using Pub/Sub
• We chose Amazon SQS• Other options include Redis, Beanstalkd, IronMQ or any other message
queue
• Created consistent flow of writes versus bursts
• Reduced length and frequency of write locks by controlling flow/speed of writes
25JUNE 2014
Using Multiple Databases• As of version 2.2, MongoDB implements locks at a per database
granularity for most read and write operations• Planned to be at the document level in version 2.8
• Moved write-heavy collections to new (separate) databases
26JUNE 2014
Using Sharding• Improves concurrency by distributing databases across multiple
mongod instances
• Locks are per-mongod instance
27JUNE 2014
Lock %: Today
28JUNE 2014
Queries without IndexesSlow responses and timeouts
29JUNE 2014
Indexing• What is it?
• How did it affect us?
• How did MMS help identify it?
• How did we diagnose the issue in our app and fix it?
• Today
30JUNE 2014
Indexing with MongoDB• Support for efficient execution of queries
• Without indexes, MongoDB must scan every document• Example
Wed Jul 17 13:40:14 [conn28600] query x.y [snip] ntoreturn:16 ntoskip:0 nscanned:16779 scanAndOrder:1 keyUpdates:0 numYields: 906 locks(micros) r:46877422 nreturned:16 reslen:6948 38172ms
38 seconds! Scanned 17k documents, returned 16
• Create indexes to cover all queries, especially support common and user-facing• Collection scans can push entire working set out of RAM
31JUNE 2014
How Did this Affect Us?• Our web apps became slow
• Queries began to timeout
• Longer operations mean longer lock times
32JUNE 2014
MMS: Identifying Indexing IssuesPage Faults• The number of times
that MongoDB requires data not located in physical memory, and must read from virtual memory.
33JUNE 2014
Diagnosis• Log Analysis
• Use mtoolsA collection of scripts to parse and visualize MongoDB log files developed by MongoDB Engineer Thomas Rueckstiess.
• mlogfilter• filter logs for slow queries, collection scans, etc.
• mplotqueries• graph query response times and volumes
• https://github.com/rueckstiess/mtools
34JUNE 2014
Diagnosis• Monitoring application logs
• Enabling ‘notablescan’ option in development and testing versions of apps
• MongoDB profiling
35JUNE 2014
The MongoDB Profiler• Collects fine grained data about MongoDB write operations, cursors,
database commands on a running mongod instance.
• Default slowOpThreshold value is 100ms, can be changed from the Mongo shell
• When enabled, profiling has a minor effect on performance
36JUNE 2014
Our Remedies• Add indexes!
• Make sure queries are covered
• Utilize the projection specification to limit fields (data) returned
37JUNE 2014
Adding Indexes• Improved performance for common queries
• Alleviates the need to go to disk for many operations
38JUNE 2014
Projection SpecificationControls the amount of data that needs to be (de-)serialized for use in your app• We used it to limit data returned in embedded documents and arrays
db.content.find( {
tweet_id: ’12345678' }, {
text: 1, screen_name: 1 });
39JUNE 2014
Page Faults: Today
40JUNE 2014
Rising Replication Lag + Falling oplog Window
41JUNE 2014
Replication• What is it?• How did it affect us?• How did MMS help identify it?• How did we diagnose the issue in our app?• How did we fix it?• Today
42JUNE 2014
What is Replication?• A replica set is a group of mongod
processes that maintain the same data set.
• Replica sets provide redundancy and high availability, and are the basis for all production deployments
43JUNE 2014
What Is the Oplog?• A special capped collection that keeps a rolling record of all operations
that modify the data stored in your databases.
• Operations are first applied on the primary and then recorded to its oplog.
• Secondary members then copy and apply these operations in an asynchronous process.
44JUNE 2014
What is Replication Lag?• A delay between an operation on the primary and the application of
that operation from the oplog to the secondary.
• Effects of excessive lag• “Lagged” members ineligible to quickly become primary• Increases the possibility that distributed read operations will be inconsistent.
45JUNE 2014
How did this affect us?• Degraded overall health of our production deployment.
• Distributed reads are no longer eventually consistent.
• Unable to bring new secondary members online.
• Caused MMS Backups to do full re-syncs.
46JUNE 2014
Identifying Replication Lag Issues with MMSThe Replication Lag chart displays the lag for your deployment
47JUNE 2014
Diagnosis• Possible causes of replication lag include network latency, disk
throughput, concurrency and/or appropriate write concern• Size of operations to be replicated• Confirmed Non-Issues for us
• Network latency• Disk throughput
• Possible Issues for us• Concurrency/write concern• Size of op is an issue because entire document is written to oplog
48JUNE 2014
Concurrency/Write Concern• Our applications apply many updates very quickly
• All operations need to be replicated to secondary members
• We use the default write concern—Acknowledge (w:1)• The mongod confirms receipt of the write operation• Allows clients to catch network, duplicate key and other errors
49JUNE 2014
Concurrency Wasn’t the IssueLock Percentage
50JUNE 2014
Operation Size Was the IssueCollection A (most active)Total Updates: 3,373Total Size of updates: 6.5 GBActivity accounted for nearly 87% of total traffic
Collection B (next most active)Total Updates: 85,423Total Size of updates: 740 MB
51JUNE 2014
Fast Growing oplog causes issuesReplication oplog Window – approximate hours available in the primary’s oplog
52JUNE 2014
How We Fixed It• Changed our schema
• Changed the types of updates that were made to documents
• Both allowed us to utilize atomic operations• Led to smaller updates• Smaller updates == less oplog space used
53JUNE 2014
Replication Lag: Today
54JUNE 2014
oplog Window: Today
55JUNE 2014
Keeping Your Deployment Healthy
56JUNE 2014
MMS Alerts
57JUNE 2014
Watch for Warnings• Be warned if you are• Running outdated versions• Have startup warnings• If a mongod is publicly visible• Pay attention to these warnings
58JUNE 2014
MMS Backups• Engineered by MongoDB
• Continuous backup with point-in-time recovery
• Fully managed backups
59JUNE 2014
Using MMS Backups• Seeding new secondaries
• Repairing replica set members
• Development and testing databases
• Restores are free!
60JUNE 2014
Summary• Know what’s expected and “normal” in your systems• Know when and what changes in your systems• Utilize MMS alerts, visualizations and warnings to keep things running
smoothly